Abstract
Two important dimensions of the Swedish social insurance system are
those of universality (encompassing the entire population) and of
compensation for loss of income. The decisions basic to the Swedish social
insurance system and thus to the Swedish Welfare State were made
during the 1910s. A universal pension insurance system was decided
upon in 1913. This was the world's first universal public insurance
system. Pensions were provided both in cases of disability and of a person
reaching the age of 67. Important factors explaining this decision were
that Sweden had the oldest population in the Western world and thus
high expenditures for poor relief, and that as the reporting and taxation
of individual incomes had just been introduced it became possible to
finance a universal pension system by means of compulsory contributions
by the individual (a special earmarked tax).The establishment of a pension insurance system provided the basis for
a system of insurance for work-related injuries, in 1916. It included the
entire workforce and was the most modern of its kind. The presence of a
pension insurance system and insurance for work-related injuries
pointed to the need for a sickness insurance system. This was designed to
deal with simple cases of injury as well as with more serious cases of
illness or injury that could lead to disability. A proposal was presented in
1919. A serious deflationary crisis after the First World War and high
levels of unemployment during the period between the two world wars
made it impossible to introduce a sickness insurance system.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
13 articles.
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